GAMEDAY: BARRACUDA VS ROADRUNNERS

Tonight’s Matchup: On Wednesday, the Barracuda and Roadrunners shift their best-of-5 division semi-final series to the Old Pueblo for game three, all tied up at 1-1. During the regular season, San Jose went 5-2-0-1 against Tucson and 3-1-0 at the TCC. Dating back to last season, San Jose is 6-1-0-1 all-time on the road against the Roadrunners.

In Case You Missed It: After falling in game one on Thursday, the Barracuda responded in game two, downing the top-seeded ‘Runners, 6-3, thanks to a pair of multi-goal nights from Rourke Chartier and Rudolfs Balcers. Also, Antoine Bibeau made 22 saves to earn his first win of the playoffs. Adam Helewka (PP) and Manny Wiederer would also tally for Team Teal, while Dylan Strome struck twice for Tucson and Mario Kempe also tallied for the Roadrunners in defeat.

Odds Makers: On April 4, the Barracuda had less than a .01% chance of making the playoffs, but six-straight wins lifted San Jose above four teams in the division over a 10-day period, punching a ticket to the Calder Cup playoffs for the third straight season. Tucson also did San Jose a favor by taking down the San Diego Gulls in three-straight games to close out the season.

Let’s Go Streaking: The Barracuda finished the regular-season riding a season-long six-game winning streak as they outscored their opponents 25-to-10 over that span, netting power-play goals in five of the six contests.

Past Playoffs: Tucson makes its first appearance in the Calder Playoffs after finishing with the Western Conference’s best regular season record (42-20-5-1 - .662%), while San Jose makes its third-straight trip to the dance after finishing with its second-best regular-season record in franchise history (34-26-4-4 - .559%). A season ago, the ‘Cuda won the Western Conference’s regular-season crown after compiling a record of 43-16-4-5 (.699%). The Barracuda are 10-11-0 all-time in Calder Cup playoff play.

Desert Swarm: The Roadrunners concluded the regular season with a +41 goal differential, which was tops in the Pacific Division. Also, Tucson allowed the AHL's second-fewest goals (173). Trade deadline addition Carter camper finished T-11th in the AHL in scoring, and netminder Adin Hill ranked fifth in goals-against average (2.28). But 2017-18 was all about the rookies for the ‘Runners as Tucson had three first-year players represented at the 2018 AHL All-Star Game (Dylan Strome, Nick Merkley, Kyle Capobianco).

Young Guns: Since Ivan Chekhovich and Sasha Chmelevski joined San Jose’s lineup on Amateur Tryout Agreements on April 4, the ‘Cuda went 6-0 in their final six games, and the two teens combined for 13 points (six goals, seven assists). Chekhovich had points in all six games he played (three goals, six assists) in the regular season and ended with the team’s best plus/minus (+8). Chekhovich collected a pair of assists in San Jose’s 6-3 win on Saturday. Chmelevski who scored on Thursday in Game 1 and added an assist in Game 2 on Saturday is the first California native to appear in a game for the ‘Cuda.

Captain America: When Captain John McCarthy was at the Winter Olympics in February representing Team USA in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Barracuda sputtered without their leader, going 2-6-1-1 in the month. Since Mac’s return, San Jose has gone 12-5-1-1. On Thursday, the Barracuda signed McCarthy to a one-year contract extension, which means he’ll return for his tenth season with the organization in 2018-19. McCarthy is the Barracuda’s all-time leader in games played (190), T-first in goals (45), T-first in power-play goals (15), and T-first in short-handed goals (4).

Blueline Bolster: 19% (36/186) of San Jose’s goals scored in 2017-18 came from its backend, compared to 15% (35/232) from its defense a season ago. In 2016-17, San Jose had the AHL’s most potent offense that included NHLer Joakim Ryan and Second Team All-AHLer Tim Heed on the blueline.

Powering Up: Before failing to score on the power play in the season finale at Stockton last Saturday, the Barracuda had lit the lamp on the man-advantage for a franchise-record 10-straight games, going 13-for-39 (33%) over that stretch. The Barracuda are two-for-nine on the PP thus far in the series and four-for-four on the kill.

Age Is Just A Number: With an average age of 22.57 years old, San Jose is the AHL’s youngest team while Tucson (23.23) is the league's third-youngest roster.

Big-Time Bibeau: Antoine Bibeau finished his first season in San Jose ranked 10th in the AHL in goals-against average (2.37), 11th in save-percentage (.919), T-sixth in wins (23), and T-third in shutouts (5). Bibeau was named a mid-season AHL All-Star and is riding a four-game winning streak entering postseason play. Bibeau is 7-8-0-1 in 15 career Calder Cup playoff games with a 2.82 goals-against average, and a .899 save percentage.